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Safeguarding the Brain of Our Smallest Children-IIIv (SafeBoosC-IIIv)

Safeguarding the Brain of Our Smallest Children-IIIv (SafeBoosC-IIIv)

Recruiting
28 years and younger
All
Phase 3

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Overview

The objective of the SafeBoosC-IIIv trial is to assess benefits and harms of cerebral oximetry in newborns receiving invasive mechanical ventilation. The hypothesis is that:

i. Cerebral oximetry added to usual care versus usual care alone in newborns receiving invasive mechanical ventilation will increase the number of hospital-free days within 90 days of randomisation.

ii. The intervention will decrease a composite outcome of death or moderate to severe neurodevelopmental disability and/or increase the mean PARCA-R non-verbal cognitive score at two years of corrected age.

Description

SafeBoosC-IIIv will be an investigator-initiated, multinational, randomised, pragmatic phase III clinical trial. The trial will be conducted in two steps. In step one, 1,610 newborns will be randomised, and the outcomes will be assessed 90 days after randomisation. Funding has been obtained for step one. If further funding is obtained, we will continue to include newborns until a total of 3,000 newborns are randomised and then follow them up at two years of corrected age (step two).

Eligibility

Inclusion Criteria:

  • Gestational age more than or equal to 28+0
  • Postnatal age less than 28 days
  • Expected to receive invasive mechanical ventilation (intubation) for at least 24 hours, as judged by the physician intending to randomise
  • Parental informed consent unless the centre has chosen to use 'opt-out' or deferred consent as consent method
  • A cerebral oximeter available so monitoring can be started within six hours after initiation of invasive mechanical ventilation

Exclusion Criteria:

  • Suspicion of or confirmed brain injury or disorder (e.g. severe hypoxic-ischemic encephalopathy, intraventricular haemorrhage grade 3 or 4, cerebral malformation, genetic or metabolic disease)
  • Suspicion or diagnosis of congenital heart malformations likely to require surgery

Study details
    Hypoxia
    Infant
    Newborn
    Diseases

NCT05907317

Copenhagen Trial Unit, Center for Clinical Intervention Research

1 May 2025

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